
Ann Leda Shapiro
Vashon Island, WA
Artist, Feminist and Acupuncturist: Painting about the body as landscape and the landscape as body.
MessageBiography
I grew up in NYC, down the street from the Museum of Natural History and across the park from the Metropolitan Museum of Art. In the sixties I migrated west to study at the San Francisco Art Institute and the University of California at Davis.
After receiving my art degrees I exchanged large-scale oil for the intimacy of watercolors. I painted the world in relationship to myself-a central, emotionally charged figure, surrounded by symbols that reflected an inner state, influenced by folk art and Indian miniatures.
In 1973 I was invited to show my works on paper at the Whitney Museum of American Art in NYC that resulted in my first confrontation with censorship. The art raised questions about male/female sexualtiy.
During the 1970's I taught criticism, the process of creativity and the Interrelationship of the arts at San Francisco State University and at the University of Colorado at Boulder for the semester at sea program. After sailing around the world I moved back to NYC for five years.
The eighties took me to the University of Arizona, Tucson and then to Austin, Texas, where I taught painting, watched birds and voluteered at an acupuncture clinic for people with AIDS. As I became familiar with the theory of Chinese medicine I discovered that the ideas echoed what I was trying to paint about.
I enrolled in acupuncture school, initially as a research project, illustrated the history of Chinese medicine and became a Board certified acupuncturist in 1991.
I live on a small island in Puget Sound, paint about the body as landscape and the landscape as body, publish books on healing and the environment and maintain an acupuncture practice.
Statement
Artist Statement
As an artist and acupuncturist, I have a unique perspective. I investigate layers of meaning through visual case studies, diagnostics, and x-ray vision, taking the body apart and reconstructing it with elements of the night sky, water, and patterns from nature. I reflect what is going on in our interior body and the exterior world. Combining psychological states and physical disorders, I portray possibilities for balancing the body and our environment. Disasters— including the pandemic, fires, smoke, tornados, storms and atomic nuclear blasts—have been the inner and outer environmental components. For my mental, physical, and spiritual well being, I walk in the woods on the island where I live, taking inspiration from the trees for their comforting resilience.
Ann Leda Shapiro | Vashon Island, Washington | www.annledashapiro.com | [email protected]